As the residential makeover of Stapleton Airport heads north toward its inevitable final sites, Infinity Home Collection has a proposition for anybody that loves Stapleton and its lifestyle: Take that big equity run-up you’ve received from recent years and put it into something you’ll never find again — a deluxe home on a site bordering the Rocky Mountain Wildlife Refuge, with an unobstructed view of the Continental Divide.

Infinity Home Collection at Stapleton’s Beeler Park

What: Infinity Home Collection at Stapleton; model homes from luxurious Alto, Vive and Luxe collections in Stapleton’s newest neighborhood, North End, some mountain views, close to Rocky Mountain National Wildlife Refuge.

“In your previous homes, what you were buying was from out of necessity; but this home is the reward,” says Infinity’s Joe Batal, who along with Austin Ellis will show you three collections of models Sunday, Oct. 7, at Stapleton’s newest neighborhood, North End, along with Infinity’s final sites bordering the panoramic open space.

Those sites, says Batal, are by far the best Stapleton has ever offered — all of the advantages of the master-planned community including its 15 schools and its new A-Line commuter rail access to Union Station and DIA, plus views that Stapleton and other Denver city areas rarely offer.

Batal, who lives in an Infinity home now, is getting one for his family, selling their old place in favor of a new one with an Evans-to-Longs-Peak vista.

You’ll see what to put on a lot like that at Infinity’s two model complexes in Beeler Park — for Alto and Vive collection models at East 60th Avenue east of Central Park Blvd, from the mid-$700s to mid-$900s; and for over-the-top Luxe Collection models a few blocks farther northeast at 61st Drive and Beeler Court, from around $1.1 million.

Those three series are an apex of Infinity Home Collection’s two decades of building at Stapleton, dating from the 2001 Parade of Homes that launched Stapleton as a community.

“People who are in our previous neighborhoods are very happy with their current homes; but when they see this, they’re going to say, ‘Okay, I’ll do it,’ ” says Batal.

Infinity builder Dave Steinke notes that a majority of Infinity’s recent customers are coming from Stapleton proper, following along as Infinity brings out newer, bigger, more opulent models.

“At this size, this is the quality of home you’re going to spend many years in,” he adds.

All three series have sites available with mountain, city or open space views. And you’ll see some extra-large sites for wider Luxe designs that’ll bring views into many parts of the home — alighting on contemporary entertaining spaces and spectacular bedroom suite levels.

Infinity isn’t a custom builder, but it comes close.

“If you want a Gaggenau range, you can have it,” says Steinke. “Our competition is really a custom home on a scraped lot in Denver, but you could spend over $2 million on one of those and never get the size and quality you’ll see here, for much less money.

“And this really is your last opportunity. If you wait, these sites just won’t be here.”

The news and editorial staffs of The Denver Post had no role in this post’s preparation.

Mark Samuelson has written about housing, business and real estate for The Denver Post for more than 25 years. He is president of Samuelson and Associates, a communications company that specializes in builder marketing, real estate, and energy technologies.